Westminster Bridge at Night

Westminster Bridge at Night
Taxi pickup on Westminster Bridge, London

Tuesday 16 June 2020

Lockdown Photography


It’s been around four months since my last blog post. That gap could be, in part, be attributed to the Covid-19 Coronavirus pandemic which has turned the world upside-down.

The Tipsy Two. A composite of two backlit shots.
 Original images F/16  ---  1/200 sec  ---  ISO 100  ---  24mm
But really, that’s a bit of an excuse. The truth is, I’ve ever been very good at keeping a journal, which is basically what a blog is. I once took a course in journalism - and I passed it. Got a certificate and everything. And I do love writing. Next to photography, it’s my favourite thing to do with my clothes on. I suppose that I just lack the self-discipline to keep up with it when there are other things to be done.





Fun with a glass ball and two specs rests.
Composite from an outdoor shoot with a white screen behind
However, although I have been mostly locked down in my house since the beginning of March, with only the occasional very limited necessary sally forth into the outside world, I have been able to make use of my camera. In fact, I think I have shot more frames in the first six months of 2020 than I usually manage in a year. I’ve experimented with water, backlighting, bokeh, macro, the Moon, and other stuff I probably would not normally have got around to doing. And just recently, I have found a shed-load of videos that I like (as opposed to the wealth of on-line dross that I’ve ploughed through to find them) which have and will, both help me to improve my skills and give me ideas to try for myself.



And I’ve been entering contests on Photocrowd and plugging away at uploading images to Flickr, all of which has helped to get my work out there.


So it hasn’t all been a total loss.


Anyway, that’s enough gassing for now. Enjoy some random shots from the last few months this I've picked for this post.



Thursday 6 February 2020

Local History

I've been pretty upset over the death of our beautiful Layla, so I haven't really been in the mood to do anything with regard to blogging.

But life goes on, so I'm back. ("Yay!" I think I can hear someone intoning quietly in the far distance...😂)

Photographing ordinary, not-particularly-special places has been an on-and-off hobby of mine for many years. Over a decade ago I donated a CD of photographs from around my local area to the Local Studies library. Don't know if they have ever made use of them, but as far as I am concerned it's all grist to the mill of the archive.

The Captain Cook public house, on the Broadway
in Barking, Essex around Christmastime in 2006/7
I like looking at old photographs of local places and then comparing them with how they are now. It is frustrating when it is not possible to tell exactly when they were taken, so I make a point of ensuring that all mine have a filename which includes the date.

People occasionally ask me what the point of taking mundane pictures is. It is, I am told, a bit boring. I just point to photographs from a century or more back. In general, we are fascinated by how people dressed and where they lived in the past. Who's to say that future generations won't be just as interested in our time? The rapidity and extent of change can be breathtaking and familiar scenes vanish almost in the blink of an eye. Yet, by contrast, so many places remain relatively unaltered.

I know that, every hour of every day, around the world, millions of pictures are being taken. So you might think that really, there is no need for me to be bimbling around photographing derelict pubs and rows of shops. But how many, in reality, of those millions of happy snaps, are actually of any use in recording the places where we live? And how many of them will even survive for longer than the next change of mobile phone?


The same site on 5 February 2020, now occupied by Abbey Leisure Centre.
Pretty much unrecognisable from before.


Will my hobby / project be a success? I have no idea and unless there is a miracle of medical science in the next couple of decades I'll be too dead to find out. But I enjoy the idea that in a hundred years' time someone might be looking at my images, comparing them with those that have gone before, then trotting out and pointing their cameras (or whatever) at the same places to record the passage of time.

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One final point. If you ever decide that you would like to do something similar
DO NOT, whatever you do, assign the copyright of your images to your local authority (or anyone else) 

Licence them if you have to, but retain the copyright in your name and make it clear that you are doing so. That way, you can continue to use your hard-won
images yourself and, should any financial benefits come from them, you will have a legal claim to them.

My Local Studies people tried to tell me that they would not be able to use the images if they didn't own the copyright. Utter nonsense. You can give permission by creating a carefully-worded licence. And you can place whatever restrictions on their use that you feel are appropriate. If they don't like it, they don't get your images!